Acanthogorgia spinosa Hiles, 1899

Ramvilas, Ghosh, Alderslade, Philip & Ranjeet, Kutty, 2023, The taxonomy of Indian gorgonians: an assessment of the descriptive records of gorgonians (Anthozoa: Octocorallia: Alcyonacea) recorded as occurring in the territorial waters of India, along with neighbouring regions and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, and the highlighting of perceived unethical practice, Zootaxa 5236 (1), pp. 1-124 : 38-39

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5236.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:796FF9F5-E71F-4C69-92CC-CF4D6752BD77

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7641060

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0388B641-7B33-FF8A-FF56-F9C3FED6FD4A

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Acanthogorgia spinosa Hiles, 1899
status

 

Acanthogorgia spinosa Hiles, 1899 View in CoL View at ENA

Acanthogorgia spinosa Hiles, 1899: 198 View in CoL , pl. 22f, fig. 3–6 (New Britain, SE Guinea)

Opinion: There is no evidence that this species occurs in the region.

Justification:

These Indian records seem to be either invalid or unconfirmable: Thomson & Simpson 1909: 192–194 (Andamans; Coromandel coast; Gopalpur; Kanyakumari; Malabar coast); Kumar et al. 2014a: 52, pl. 23, fig. A–D (Havelock, Munak Gate); Fernando et al. 2017: 55, pl. 21, fig. A–E (Havelock, Munak Gate).

Literature analysis: This species was erected by Hiles for material collected off New Britain. The account included drawings of a few sclerites that could have come from a number of different species of the genus, and the holotype has never been redescribed so the exact details of the sclerites are unknown and the species is not recognisable .

In Thomson & Simpson’s (1909) account of Acanthogorgia muricata Verrill, 1883 , the authors claimed that Acanthogorgia spinosa was a synonym, but that A. muricata , which is also unrecognisable, only occurs in the West Indies. The accounts given by Kumar et al. (2014a) and Fernando et al. (2017) are identical, but the closeup image of the polyps clearly shows their material has polyps that have no crown spines and are very similar to those illustrated in their account of A. breviflora . These traits indicate the material would probably be a species of Muricella or perhaps Anthogorgia , but the illustrated sclerites look more like those found in Acanthogorgia , in some species of which the crown spines are absent or very reduced, for example: Acanthogorgia ildibaha , A. isoxya and A. augusta (all Grasshoff, 1999), and also see Fabricius & Alderslade (2001:184), but the polyps of the Indian material look quite different and its identity is uncertain. Regardless, Hiles figured a polyp in her original description and it had a distinct crown with many long projecting spines, and therefore quite different to the Indian specimens. Kumar et al. (2015) just lists the species and provides an illustration of the specimens in Kumar et al. (2014a) and Fernando et al. (2017).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Anthozoa

Order

Alcyonacea

Family

Acanthogorgiidae

Genus

Acanthogorgia

Loc

Acanthogorgia spinosa Hiles, 1899

Ramvilas, Ghosh, Alderslade, Philip & Ranjeet, Kutty 2023
2023
Loc

Acanthogorgia spinosa

Hiles, I. L. 1899: 198
1899
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